The fashion designer famously worn her "58% Don't Want Pershing" to meet Margaret Thatcher in 1984. A year earlier she had launched her range of oversized white t-shirts with large black block letter slogans including her anti-drug message ‘CHOOSE LIFE” as worn by Wham in their music video for “Wake Me Up Before You Go Go”. The Pro-life anti-abortion movement later appropriated this message for their campaign, angering the designer.

The exhibition has a great sound track playing everything from punk to Primal Scream featuring. This really resonates as band T-shirts have also been a key part in how we outwardly identify with – or against – our social peers. In the exhibition, instantly recognisable designs representing the likes of Joy Division, The Velvet Underground as well as Nico and The Rolling Stones are displayed, while the exhibition also delves deeper into the debate as to how far fashion has co-opted the concept.

For me it was this high fashion section that I found most interesting - seeing how various luxury brands have interpreted the slogan T-shirt. From Moschino's carrier bag inspired t-shirt through to Dior's sell-out "We Should All Be Feminists", one of the most talked-about fashion items of last year.